Copyright 2005 Elaine Currie
Building A Successful Home Based Business struck me as a pretty
good title for an article concerned with home based business.
Successful Home Based Business is a decent keyword phrase for
the search engine robots and "successful" is on most lists of
good words to use in advertising, so that should help attract
human readers. Building A Successful Home Based Business is also
accurately descriptive of the content.
I was especially pleased with this title because it occurred to
me very quickly when usually it takes me longer to think up a
title than to write a whole article. When it comes to choosing
names, my brain just shuts down. It's always been the same, I
can still remember the anxiety caused by having to choose a name
for a childhood pet gerbil or goldfish . "Goldie" wasn't
terribly original but it was the best I could manage for the
fish and I think my mother eventually had to name the gerbil on
my behalf. When it came to naming my children, the
responsibility was almost unbearable: not only did I have to
face the trauma of thinking up names, I had to try to guess if
the child would grow up despising me for making an inappropriate
choice. A name that suits a cute baby can sound ridiculous when
applied to a clumsy school kid or, worse still, a moody
teenager. It would be a lot easier if we could just call them
"child 1","child 2" etc and let them choose their own names when
they reach the age of twelve or so.
Anyway, back to Building A Successful Home Based Business. I had
the article ready, I had the great title and then I received an
email from the owner of Ezine Articles.com (one of the places I
regularly submit articles). The email started like this:
"Hi Elaine,
Did you hear that we stopped accepting articles with duplicate
titles?
This was a defensive move on our part to reduce the number of
incoming non-exclusive rights article submissions. Now that all
86k of the articles listed have unique titles, that means that
your future article titles may be rejected if it's already in
use by another author... "
My first reaction was: "Oh, good", my second reaction was: "Oh,
no". The second reaction was caused by the realisation that
things are going to get more difficult for people who take care
over their work. Thousands of articles on every subject
imaginable are being added to the vast Internet library each
day. The quality of some of these articles is dubious. Many
Internet entrepreneurs are putting their metaphorical pens to
their virtual paper and churning out poorly spelt,
ungrammatical, pointless articles just for use as vehicles for
their resource box. Some Internet entrepreneurs cheat by having
articles ghost written and then publishing the articles as their
own. Worse still, there are unscrupulous Internet entrepreneurs
who use software to churn out articles that they then pretend to
have written. Worst of all are the Internet outright cheats who
stoop to copying someone else's article, claiming authorship and
slapping on their own copyright notice.
The non-duplicate title rule imposed by Ezine Articles is an
excellent thing and should cause the cheats some problems. My
point here, however, is not to lecture on the evils of cheating.
There is a saying: "All's fair in love and a successful home
based business" (or something like that) and I'm not about to
start my own anti-plagiarist cyber police force. My really big
concern about this deluge of articles is purely selfish: I fear
that the cheats have used up all the best titles and I'll never
be able to think up a new one. I haven't yet submitted "Building
A Successful Home Based Business " but I fear it might get
bounced straight back at me for re-naming..
The email from Ezine Articles included some suggestions for
inventing good unique titles. One suggestion was to increase the
length of future article titles. I can see how this would work
but, if the cheats keep on publishing at their current rate, we
are going to end up with 95 word titles and people will lose
interest in the article before they get to paragraph one. Any
minute now, some enterprising Internet entrepreneur will
announce that he has invented a "brand new, hot, original, one
of its kind" tool for creating unique article titles "at the
push of a button" which he will let you have at a "discounted
price". In no time at all the Internet will be overrun with
wannabe entrepreneurs making the same claims. As there is
software that can do a similar thing with whole articles, titles
should be very easy to manipulate. Maybe they will find a way of
copyrighting titles that they can then hold to ransom. Imagine
the stress of having to bid on ebay for the title you need for
your new article.
Another suggestion was to change the order of the words if your
preferred title had already been used by someone else. Obviously
this can work well but there are going to be some ugly titles
created by this anagrammaticall manipulation. If we take my
short title as an example: "Building A Successful Home Based
Business", we could rearrange that to make "Building A Home
Based Successful Business" or, at a stretch "Building A
Successful Business - Home Based" , maybe we could even push it
to "A Successful Home Based Business - Building" or "A Home
Based Business: Successful Building" but that's about the limit
if we want our title to make sense. After this we will have to
look at perhaps changing "A" to "Your" or adding "Easily" or
"Quickly" in front of or after "Building A Successful Home Based
Business". The length of the title is already starting to grow!
To search engine robots, the word order changing won't matter
but to human readers it makes a big difference. "At Home Work"
already crops up all over the place as an alternative to "Work
At Home". The two phrases don't actually mean the same thing and
the former phrase is so clumsy. People tend not to say: "I want
to at home work". As a Google search term it's fine, it's also
very popular and that's why it gets used, but it's not exactly
good conversational English. Just yesterday I saw a website
offering to help people to locate "an online home based job you
can work at home as a successful home based business". What?
Well, I suppose it does get the message over (just about) but
it's not exactly easy reading. It's just a collection of
keywords strung together in an order that barely makes sense and
that is not the best way to communicate with other human beings.
The addition of "part-time or full-time", "free", "from
home","no risk" and "guaranteed" would make this just about the
perfect title material. Then we could extend it with other
popular words like "101 Ways" and "Top Ranked" and "Top Ten".
It's easy to see how this small selection of words alone could
be the start of a whole series of keyword rich article titles,
it could run into hundreds. I'd better get on and write some
articles to fit those keywords. Now, if only I had a piece of
software that would rearrange the keywords into unique
patterns...
About the author:
Elaine Currie has a Work From Home Directory at her Plug-In
Profit Site to help everyone who wants to work at home:
http://www.huntingvenus.com